Skipped church this snowy weekend? Fear not

Catholic activists homeward bound from the anti-abortion March for Life in Washington were trapped on an interstate by the weekend blizzard. They built an altar from snow and conducted Catholic Mass. Video posted on Twitter by Abbie Rehurek.

(RNS) Broadcast versions of the Catholic Mass may have seen a bump as the much of the Eastern seaboard is still digging out from 20 to 28 inches of snow dumped by #blizzard2016

Anticipating the massive weekend storm, reporters at Philadelphia Magazine asked the archdiocese, on behalf of the city’s many concerned Catholics: “What will become of my soul if I skip church on Sunday due to the massive amount of snow — snow that God himself hath sent?”

No TV? Read the Word of God, especially the biblical readings for Sunday, which can be found online.

Pray the Holy Rosary, and/or make use of other devotional prayers.

The Bishop of Arlington, Va., just south of Washington, alerted parishioners ahead of the storm that Catholics in the diocese weren’t obligated to attend Mass and by Saturday, when some people might have headed for weekend Mass, snow drifts made it nearly impossible to drive.

Catholics weren’t alone in using caution. Riverside Baptist Church in Washington D.C., posted a snowfall video on its website with this message in bold red type: “SUNDAY SERVICES CANCELED. Stay safe, read or listen to a sermon under the sermon tab, pray and return to us Sunday, January 31st. The Lord bless and keep you.”

Still, this weekend may not set a low-attendance record. Blizzard or no blizzard, millions of self-identified Christians — Catholic or Protestant — don’t attend weekend worship services more than once a month, anyway.

A Public Religion Research Institute survey found many people say they attend worship, but are really giving pollsters a snow job.

“There’s an aspirational quality here,” Robert Jones, CEO of PRRI pointed out. “People see themselves as the kind of person who would go.”

“There’s an aspirational quality …People see themselves as the kind of person who would go.”

This is an important part of the immorality and dishonesty of religion. It paints for us an unreachable goal, calls it an ideal of virtue and guilts us for our inevitable failure.

Knowing one will be forgiven is subversively immoral also. For each failure we owe the God a bit more faith currency. The pathetic hamster wheel never stops. And victims of this philosophy almost never wake up.

dmj76

Dear Max

Surely you know that many people go to church for community, not doctrine.